Tuesday morning brought another dose of market anxiety as futures extended Monday's losses, with investors stuck in a holding pattern ahead of some pretty significant events. Nobody wants to make big moves when Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) is about to report earnings and there's a backlog of economic data coming after the government shutdown.
The mood was decidedly cautious. Dow Jones futures fell 0.23%, S&P 500 futures declined 0.15%, Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 0.15%, and Russell 2000 futures slid 0.29%. Not catastrophic, but not exactly inspiring confidence either.
On the bond front, the 10-year Treasury yield was sitting at 4.10%, while the two-year was at 3.57%. The CME Group's FedWatch tool showed markets pricing in a 46.4% probability that the Federal Reserve will cut rates at its December meeting. Basically a coin flip at this point.
The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 respectively, were both lower in premarket trading Tuesday. The SPY was down 0.19% at $664.42, while the QQQ declined 0.24% to $602.23.
Individual Stock Movements Worth Watching
Axalta Coating Systems Surges on Merger News
Axalta Coating Systems Ltd. (AXTA) had a much better morning than most, jumping 10.68% after announcing an all-stock merger of equals with Akzo Nobel N.V. When companies describe a deal as a "merger of equals," it's usually corporate speak for a complicated transaction, but investors seemed to like this one.
From a technical perspective, AXTA has been showing a stronger price trend over the short and medium terms, though the long-term trend has been weaker. The stock maintains a moderate quality ranking, which makes sense for a coating systems company in what's been a challenging industrial environment.
Molina Healthcare Gets a Boost
Molina Healthcare Inc. (MOH) gained 3.05% after announcing a proposed offering of $750 million in Senior Notes due 2031. The stock also got attention because Michael Burry, the investor made famous by "The Big Short," reiterated his long position in the company. When Burry says he's still in, people pay attention.
Molina has had a weaker price trend over the short and medium terms, but maintains a strong long-term trend with a strong value ranking. Sometimes healthcare stocks just grind higher slowly, and that's okay.
Avantor CEO Shows Confidence
Avantor Inc. (AVTR) was up 2.76% after CEO Ligner Emmanuel bought 87,500 shares worth $993,125 on November 17 at $11.35 each. When executives put nearly a million dollars of their own money into their company's stock, it tends to send a signal. Whether that signal is "this is undervalued" or "please stop selling" is always up for debate, but markets generally interpret insider buying positively.
The stock has been showing weaker price trends across short, medium, and long-term timeframes, with a poor quality ranking. So Emmanuel is either seeing something others aren't, or he's trying to change the narrative.
Home Depot Awaits Judgment Day
Home Depot Inc. (HD) fell 0.71% as investors prepared for the home improvement retailer's earnings report before the opening bell. Analysts are expecting earnings of $3.85 per share on revenue of $41.14 billion. The housing market has been weird lately, caught between high interest rates and resilient consumer spending, so these results could tell us something about where things are headed.
Home Depot has been maintaining weaker price trends across all timeframes—short, medium, and long-term—with a poor value ranking. The stock hasn't been performing well, which means earnings could either provide a catalyst for a turnaround or confirm that the struggles are real.
Helmerich And Payne Disappoints
Helmerich and Payne Inc. (HP) tumbled 8.22% after reporting a loss of 1 cent per share for the fourth quarter. The drilling company did manage to beat on revenue, posting quarterly sales of $1.012 billion against analyst estimates of $973.678 million. But when you're losing money, beating on sales doesn't always save you from a selloff.
Interestingly, HP has been showing stronger price trends over the short, medium, and long terms, with a poor growth ranking. The market clearly didn't like the earnings miss, even with the revenue beat.
What Happened Monday
Monday's session was rough for most sectors. Materials, financials, and energy stocks recorded the biggest losses, while communication services and utilities managed to buck the trend and close higher. It was one of those days where defensiveness looked smart.
The Nasdaq Composite fell 0.84% to 22,708.07, the S&P 500 dropped 0.82% to 6,672.41, the Dow Jones declined 1.18% to 46,590.24, and the Russell 2000 took the biggest hit, falling 1.96% to 2,341.38. Small caps continue to struggle, which is never a great sign for risk appetite.
What the Analysts Are Saying
LPL Financial has been thinking ahead to 2026, projecting that the year will be defined by a "transforming and evolving landscape for markets." They're expecting a resilient economy, bolstered by the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," to support corporate profits, with Artificial Intelligence driving essential efficiency gains.
The key challenge, according to LPL, will be hitting double-digit earnings growth. They note that "hitting lofty EPS targets will be key in 2026; it won't be easy" given current valuations. Translation: stocks are expensive, so companies better deliver.
AI remains front and center in their analysis. LPL states that "AI's transformative potential positions it as a cornerstone for equity gains in 2026," though they're also quick to point out that stretched valuations remain a top risk. It's the classic bull case with a side of caution.
On monetary policy, LPL views the Federal Reserve's normalization efforts favorably. They observe that historically, "stocks have fared well when the Fed has cut rates while stocks were near all-time highs." So if the Fed does cut in December, that could be supportive.
But LPL isn't saying it's all smooth sailing. They're advising investors to prepare for volatility around the midterm elections and potential trade tensions. Because 2026 wouldn't be a proper year without some political drama mixed into market action.
Economic Data on Deck
Tuesday's economic calendar is packed, though some data might be affected by the government shutdown, according to the BLS website.
October's import price index is scheduled for 8:30 a.m., followed by industrial production and capacity utilization data at 9:15 a.m. By 10:00 a.m., we'll get November's home builder confidence index and August's business inventories data. Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr is also scheduled to speak at 10:30 a.m. ET.
It's one of those days where the data dump could move markets, especially since we've been operating with less information than usual following the shutdown.
Commodities, Crypto, and Global Markets
Crude oil futures were trading lower by 0.52% in the early New York session, hovering around $59.55 per barrel. Energy prices have been soft lately as demand concerns compete with supply constraints.
Gold Spot fell 0.15% to around $4,039.22 per ounce. Its last record high was $4,381.6 per ounce, so we're still well within striking distance of new records. The U.S. Dollar Index was 0.06% lower at the 99.5240 level.
Bitcoin (BTC) was having a rough morning, trading 4.47% lower at $91,327.61 per coin after briefly falling below the $90,000 mark. After a strong run, crypto is taking a breather, which happens when risk appetite fades.
Asian markets closed lower Tuesday across the board. China's CSI 300, Hong Kong's Hang Seng, Japan's Nikkei 225, Australia's ASX 200, India's NIFTY 50, and South Korea's Kospi indices all fell. European markets were also trading lower in early action, suggesting the cautious mood was global, not just an American thing.